Walking by Itself: The Singular History of the Chinese Cat
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Barrett, Timothy H
Strange, Mark
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Cambridge University Press
Abstract
In today’s urbanized world, the domestic animals most familiar to the majority
of us tend to be those small enough to share a living space with human beings.
They may range in size from fairly large dogs through various smaller mammals down to tropical fish, and even smaller pets. The cat, towards the top end
of this spectrum, vies with the dog as one of the most interactive animals and,
hence, one of the most popular to be found in ordinary homes.1 Yet, unlike the
dog, which has lived with humans for thousands of years, the cat – even if
associated with people for almost as long – has only been brought inside the
house in historical times, and is well known for still retaining a measure of
aloofness, as our chapter title suggests. We have the sources to hand to trace cat
histories in several ancient and modern societies and, though a detailed sequential history for China has yet to be written, the provisional narrative outlined
here should be sufficient to suggest that cat histories have not all unfolded in the
same way or at the same pace.
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Book Title
Animals Through Chinese History: Earliest Times to 1911
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Open Access license CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0
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